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EI2GYB > ASTRO    11.07.23 09:30l 135 Lines 11084 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: This Week's Sky at a Glance, July 7 - 16
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This Week's Sky at a Glance, July 7 - 16

By: Alan MacRobert July 7, 2023

FRIDAY, JULY 7

Ý Upper left of Venus in twilight, Mars is now less than 2ø from Regulus; see the scene below. Once you spot Venus after sunset (or even before sunset), how much longer will it be until you definitely detect the star, then the planet? Regulus is magnitude 1.4, Mars is 1.7, meaning Mars is one-third fainter.1 

SATURDAY, JULY 8

Ý Three doubles at the top of Scorpius. The head of Scorpius - the near-vertical row of three stars upper right of Antares - stands due south right after dark. The top star of the row is Beta Scorpii or Graffias, a fine double star for telescopes: separation 13 arcseconds, magnitudes 2.8 and 5.0.

Just 1ø below it is the very wide naked-eye pair Omega1 and Omega2 Scorpii, aligned diagonally. They're 4th magnitude and a wide ¬ø apart. Binoculars show their slight color difference; they're spectral types B9 and G2.

Upper left of Beta by 1.6ø is Nu Scorpii, separation 41 arcseconds, magnitudes 3.8 and 6.5. In fact this is a telescopic triple. High power in excellent seeing reveals Nu's brighter component itself to be a close binary, separation 2 arcseconds, magnitudes 4.0 and 5.3, aligned almost north-south.

SUNDAY, JULY 9

Ý Mars and Regulus, upper left of Venus in late twilight, are in conjunction this evening and tomorrow evening, 0.7ø apart. 

Ý Last-quarter Moon (exact at 9:48 p.m. EDT). The Moon rises around 1 a.m. in Pisces. By the beginning of dawn it's high in the south, with bright Jupiter about two fists to its left and Saturn more than twice as far to its right.

MONDAY, JULY 10

Ý The Moon, just past last quarter, rises around 1 a.m. tonight and Jupiter follows it up about 20 minutes later. By early dawn Tuesday morning they're high in the east-southeast, with Jupiter to the Moon's lower left.

TUESDAY, JULY 11

Ý In early dawn on Wednesday, Jupiter shines upper right of the Moon. If it's still dark enough, look for the Pleiades to the Moon's lower left, as shown below.

On Thursday morning, the Pleiades are closer above the Moon. 

Ý One hour after sunset, as twilight is fading and the stars are coming out, you'll find the two brightest stars of summer, Vega and Arcturus, equally near the zenith: Vega toward the east, Arcturus toward the southwest (depending on your location).

Different people have an easier or harder time seeing star colors, especially subtle ones. Vega is white with just a touch of icy blue. Arcturus is a yellow-orange giant. To me, their tints show a little better against the deep blue of late twilight rather than against the black of night.

WEDNESDAY JULY 12

Ý Low in the northwest or north at the end of these long summer twilights, would you recognize noctilucent clouds if you saw them? They're the most astronomical of all cloud types, with their extreme altitude and formation on, among other things, meteoric dust particles. I think they're also the most beautiful.

Noctilucent cloud season runs from mid-May to mid-August (in the Northern Hemisphere). They used to be rare but they're becoming more common, probably due to the extra methane being released into the atmosphere by climate change. See Bob King's article. 

THURSDAY, JULY 13

Ý Starry Scorpius is sometimes called "the Orion of Summer" - for its brightness, its blue-white giant stars, and its prominent red supergiant (Antares in the case of Scorpius, Betelgeuse for Orion). But Scorpius passes a lot lower across the southern sky than Orion does, for those of us at mid-northern latitudes. That means it has only one really good evening month: July.

Catch Scorpius at its highest in early to mid evening now, before it starts to tilt lower toward the southwest. It's full of deep-sky objects to hunt with binoculars or a telescope and a sky atlas.

FRIDAY, JULY 14

Ý After dark Altair shines in the east-southeast. It's the second-brightest star on the eastern side of the sky, after Vega high to its upper left. The third star of the Summer Triangle is Deneb, less bright, to their left.

Above Altair by a finger-width at arm's length is little Tarazed, 3rd magnitude and orange, which helps to identify it.

Altair is a fast-spinning, white type-A star, somewhat larger and hotter than the Sun, only 17 light-years away. It spins so fast that, using interferometry, astronomers were able in 1999 to confirm that it is widened around its equator into a very ellipsoid shape. A later direct image is below.

SATURDAY, JULY 15

Ý Now that Altair is getting nice and high in the east-southeast and the evenings are moonless, it's time to greet the Dolphin and the Arrow.

Look for little Delphinus about a fist at arm's length lower left of Altair. He's leaping leftward just below the summer Milky Way.

Sagitta, the Arrow, is smaller and fainter. Look for it closer to Altair's upper left. The Arrow points lower left past the Dolphin's nose. For more on Sagitta and its telescopic cluster M71, see the July Sky & Telescope, page 43.

Also in the vicinity is the lovely little binocular asterism The Coathanger. It's 4ø above (northwest of) Sagitta's tail and currently poses upside down. See page 54 of the July Sky & Telescope, which includes lots of telescopic sights around it.

SUNDAY, JULY 16

Ý The tail of Scorpius is low due south after dark, to the lower right of the Sagittarius Teapot. How low depends on how far north or south you live: the farther south, the higher.

Look for the two stars especially close together in the tail. These are Lambda and fainter Upsilon Scorpii, known as the Cat's Eyes. They're 0.6ø apart and canted at an angle; the cat is tilting its head to the right. And the cat has a bleary eye; Upsilon is fainter than Lambda (they're magnitudes 2.6 and 1.6). Both are blue-white giants, 500 and 700 light years away, respectively. Yes, the fainter one is the nearer one.

Between the Cat's Eyes and the Teapot's spout are the open star clusters M6 and especially M7, showy in binoculars.

A line through the Cat's Eyes points west (right) by nearly a fist-width toward Mu Scorpii, a much tighter pair known as the Little Cat's Eyes. They're oriented almost exactly the same way as Lambda and Upsilon. If you have very sharp eyes, can you resolve the Mu pair without using binoculars?

This Week's Planet Roundup

Mercury is very deep in the glow of sunset, but a little less so each day. Starting around July 12th, you might start looking for it just above the west-northwest horizon about 20 minutes after sunset. It's 23ø lower right of Venus on that date. Binoculars help. At least Mercury is bright now, magnitude -0.9 on that date.

Venus moves toward it by about a degree a day.

Venus (magnitude -4.7) is the "Evening Star" dominating the low west in twilight. It's dropping sunward faster now day by day. It sets while twilight is still in progress.

Get your telescope on Venus as early as you can, preferably during late afternoon in a clear blue sky while it's still high. Venus is a tiny white crescent, enlarging and thinning and as it swings closer to Earth and closer to our line of sight to the Sun. From July 7th to 14th it expands from about 37 to 42 arcseconds in diameter while waning from 26% to 19% sunlit. It will continue to swell in diameter and thin in phase as it drops lower. It will be lost from sight later in the month.

Even good binoculars, steadily braced, are enough, or soon will be, to show Venus's tiny crescent. But with the naked eye? Mere 20/20 vision isn't good enough; success may await the eagle-eyed with 20/15, 20/12, 0r (rare) 20/10 vision. Try during different stages of twilight before the sky becomes too dark and Venus's glare too spready.

You may improve your chances by sighting through a clean, round hole in a stiff piece of paper 1 mm, 2mm, or 3mm in diameter (try them all). This will mask out the optical aberrations that are common away from the center of your eye's cornea and lens.

One who apparently succeeded in spotting the crescent of Venus was Edgar Allan Poe, as memorialized in his haunting poem "Ulalume." See my story about that in December 2021; scroll down here to the Planet Roundup.

Mars (magnitude 1.7) glows weakly to Venus's upper left low in the west at dusk. They're beginning to draw apart; 4ø separates Mars and Venus on July 7th, 6ø on the 14th.

Mars this week closely passes Regulus. Star and planet are closest on July 9th and 10th, 0.7ø apart. Regulus is magnitude 1.4 and Mars is 1.7, so you'll probably see Regulus first as twilight fades.

In a telescope Mars is just a tiny blob 4.2 arcseconds in diameter, since it's on the far side of its orbit from us. And it's a small planet to begin with.

Jupiter (magnitude -2.3, in Aries) rises around 1 or 2 a.m. in the east-northeast. By the beginning of dawn it's shining high in the east. 

Saturn (magnitude +0.8, in dim Aquarius) rises around 11 p.m. It's at its highest in the south and sharpest and steadiest in a telescope just before dawn begins. The 1st-magnitude star about two fists below it then is Fomalhaut. 

Uranus, magnitude 5.8 in Aries, is in the east-northeast by the beginning of dawn (about 11ø lower left of Jupiter).

Neptune, magnitude 7.9 at the Aquarius-Pisces border, is high in the southeast before dawn begins, 20ø east along the ecliptic from Saturn.

All descriptions that relate to your horizon - including the words up, down, right, and left - are written for the world's mid-northern latitudes. Descriptions and graphics that also depend on longitude (mainly Moon positions) are for North America.

Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) is Universal Time minus 4 hours. UT is sometimes called UTC, GMT, or Z time.



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